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Recycling IT

UPS, a parcel delivery specialist, is using its advanced online logistics technology to help the organisation and its customers manage the recycling of their waste. “It’s about making the most of the work the company does,” says Graham Nugent, the company’s regions applications manager. “We want to provide recycling to our customers and provide an effective returns policy that grows out of the popularity of the web.”

The ever-elusive paperless office

The paperless office as a concept has been around since the mid-1980s but is arguably even further away from being realised today than when it first appeared. “There are two phases in its development. Firstly when computers started becoming useful, people started talking about the paperless office but it was not actually viable.Then in the more recent second phase with the advent of the internet it really looked as if the concept could happen.

"Virtual” instructors help Ambow personalise education

Ambow Education is a Beijing-based, privately held company founded in 2000 that provides personalised online and in-class education to schoolchildren and university students, as well as online educational programs for corporate clients. Its business model relies on personalisation in several ways. For example, Ambow has relationships with more than 100 universities to deliver vocational training that is customised according to the needs of businesses near each university.

Technology makes personalisation possible for Baidu

Baidu, whose name means “hundreds of times”, is a NASDAQ-listed company based in Beijing that holds about two-thirds of China’s search engine market. Its revenue reached US$468m (Rmb3.2bn) in 2008, an 83% increase on 2007. In addition to online and mobile-phone searches, Baidu’s businesses include keyword auctions, marketing and targeted advertising. All business lines rely on personalisation. According to Shen Haoyu, vice-president of business operations, the business is “really made possible by technology, and by the internet. We’re not selling a computer.”

The use of market data

One particular type of data that life sciences companies have grown increasingly interested in is market data: 27% have moved towards basing decisions about product development more on the likelihood of market adoption and 30% expect to do so in the next three years. Overall, nearly six in ten fi rms believe that using data to model market trends would be of significant use in shaping innovation strategy.

Want to boost green thinking? Apply a little behavioural science

Today, businesses ignore sustainability and green issues at their peril. According to nearly 40% of our survey respondents (60% in France and 43% in China), consumers today would like to see companies reduce their carbon footprint on products and services. The issue is more important, they say, than designing cheaper, better value or more reliable products. But consumers themselves have a big role to play in reducing greenhouse emissions—not simply in the product choices they make, but in being aware of their own behaviour, especially regarding energy consumption.

Helping students spot the flaws in their industrial designs helps National Instruments fill the gaps in its talent pipeline

National Instruments, a US company that makes equipment for testing and controlling industrial processes, is heavily committed to investing in R&D. Last year, for example, the firm invested 16% of its revenues —US$160m—in its research programmes worldwide. These days, more and more of that R&D is carried out in Asia. Of the firm’s 2,000 scientists and engineers, around 30% of them are now in Asia—roughly in line with Asia’s contribution to the company’s global revenues—working in three centres in Bangalore, Penang and Shanghai.

Delhi’s Mission Convergence: Welfare to the People

Launched in 2008, “Mission Convergence” is an ICT-driven, high-priority and award-winning initiative of the government of Delhi to bring welfare benefits to the city’s poorest residents. It “converges” Delhi’s nine social welfare departments and 46 welfare schemes into a single, eenabled delivery channel. Rashmi Singh, director of the mission, explains, “We are taking welfare entitlements to the poorest’s doorstep, not as a favor but as a duty.” With an estimated 4m of Delhi’s 17m residents now classified as economically vulnerable, this is a much needed effort.

No rest for the vigilant

Achmea, the Netherlands’ largest insurance company with 13,500 employees, added PDAs (personal digital assistants) and smartphones to its portfolio of business communications devices about two years ago, but Bob Jutte, the firm’s CIO, continues to review the potential risks of using them. “Smartphones,” he says, “now have connections to the mobile Internet and have effectively become small notebooks. Originally it was a mobile contact book, now it is a mobile office. So we need to continue looking for a good security solution for PDAs.

For the BBC, social media opportunities outweigh the risks

BBC, the British public service broadcaster, has adopted a liberal view on the use of new technologies. Its journalists and reporters use social media sites, such as Twitter, on a daily basis as one of many sources of information and public opinion, and leverage Facebook in their research of news stories and people. BBC employees also use Facebook for internal networking and communication with colleagues. The IT department is also mulling over the policies that would permit the use of personal laptops.  

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